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Hollywood studio filmmaking in the age of Netflix: a tale of two institutional logics

Allègre L. Hadida (), Joseph Lampel (), W. Walls and Amit Joshi ()
Additional contact information
Allègre L. Hadida: University of Cambridge
Joseph Lampel: University of Manchester
Amit Joshi: IMD Switzerland

Journal of Cultural Economics, 2021, vol. 45, issue 2, No 3, 213-238

Abstract: Abstract Online streaming services are challenging long-standing decision-making processes in the traditional motion picture industry, thus placing Hollywood major studios at a crossroads. We use the institutional logics perspective to examine how both traditional studios and online streaming services make strategic decisions on which films to produce and how these films are to be distributed. We then apply scenario analysis to explore how their interaction will likely evolve. We argue that the key criteria that studio executives use to make production and distribution decisions are shaped by what we define as a commitment institutional logic: decision-making heuristics that focus their attention on theatrical release and box-office intakes. In contrast, online streaming services follow a convenience institutional logic, the product of advanced data analytics to increase subscriptions. In the convenience institutional logic, the need to drive online traffic by providing users with an extensive catalogue of movies guides film production and distribution decisions. Whereas the commitment logic aims for mass-market hits in cinemas, the convenience logic seeks to reach a wide range of subscribers at home with micro-segmented offerings. We compare the two logics, develop four scenarios of how the interaction between them may shape the film industry, and offer recommendations.

Keywords: Hollywood studio; Streaming service; Institutional logic; Scenario analysis; Decision-making; Film production and distribution (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
References: View references in EconPapers View complete reference list from CitEc
Citations: View citations in EconPapers (6)

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DOI: 10.1007/s10824-020-09379-z

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